Freddie, that ubiquitous ombudsman, has taken me out for a ride for bashing Martin Buber. I get the feeling our disagreement isn’t about Buber anymore, so don’t feel any special pressure to catch up before proceeding. The basic disagreement between us is this: Should we try to love our . . . . Continue Reading »
Dick Sosey is an American professor who teaches at the University of Alberta, Canada, and is an expert on issue of discrimination against people with disabilities. In response to a story published in the Denver Post about the murder of a boy with autism by his father, which Sobsey perceived to be . . . . Continue Reading »
Troubling news today from the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education about the rising the cost of college tuition and the increasing percentage of Americans who are unable to afford it: Over all, the report found, published college tuition and fees increased 439 percent from 1982 to . . . . Continue Reading »
Moral Issues and Political Choices: That is the title of a lecture Fr. Richard John Neuhaus gave at Roanoke College, shortly before the recent elections. Watch it online here . It takes a while to download, but, as you might imagine from your monthly doses of the Public Square, it is well worth . . . . Continue Reading »
In this week’s edition of my podcast, What It Means to be Human, I discuss the media’s fascination with, and often fawning reportage about suicide outlaws. Here is the . . . . Continue Reading »
According to MSNBC , a group of conservatives, having broken away from the Episcopal church, has formed a rival denomination. . . . . Continue Reading »
Here’s an interesting interview with Buzz McLaughlin, a Christian filmmaker trying to make movies that avoid the extremes of total secularity and didactic piety. I’m sure I’m not alone in hoping that this project becomes wildly successful. . . . . Continue Reading »
Seeing as Advent is a penitential season, and seeing as I’ve been talking about Advent music, here’s a penitential song. Well, sort of. It’s not exactly sacred, at least in traditional terms, but it is callled “Sinner’s Prayer.” And it’s covered by B.B. . . . . Continue Reading »
What drove the men who attacked Mumbai? Guy Sorman writes that the massacre “wasn’t some desperate move to make a statement. It was a carefully planned operation, under the command of sophisticated leadership . . . in order to achieve a strategic, indeed worldwide, goal.” This . . . . Continue Reading »